cordless phone hack

J

Jeff Zimmerman

Guest
I am working on a robotics project, and i need a way to control it
cheaply. I have a couple of cordless phones that aren't doing
anything, so it seems simple enough to use the DTMF to drive some
relays and operate the motors.

If anyone could help me out, I would greatly appreciate it.
 
Sounds VERY interesting


"Jeff Zimmerman" <jrz126@ieee.org> wrote in message
news:c6842b8f.0312050816.5fce7d83@posting.google.com...
I am working on a robotics project, and i need a way to control it
cheaply. I have a couple of cordless phones that aren't doing
anything, so it seems simple enough to use the DTMF to drive some
relays and operate the motors.

If anyone could help me out, I would greatly appreciate it.
 
On 5 Dec 2003 08:16:52 -0800, jrz126@ieee.org (Jeff Zimmerman) wrote:

Hi, just starting to learn about telephony in data comm class but will
pass on anything i learn in the next 10 weeks that might be helpful
here for you

I am working on a robotics project, and i need a way to control it
cheaply. I have a couple of cordless phones that aren't doing
anything, so it seems simple enough to use the DTMF to drive some
relays and operate the motors.

If anyone could help me out, I would greatly appreciate it.
 
Jeff Zimmerman wrote:
I am working on a robotics project, and i need a way to
control it cheaply. I have a couple of cordless phones
that aren't doing anything, so it seems simple enough to
use the DTMF to drive some relays and operate the motors.

If anyone could help me out, I would greatly appreciate
it.
What do you need help with, specifically?
 
I'm not sure how to even begin, I was thinking I could use a DTMF
decoder (similar to one that will display the number dialed) on the
line input on the base. but I think the voltages would be a problem,
my robot is limited to 24 VDC.

Another idea was to try to figure out where the tone is generated on
the base and go from there. I think this would be alot harder.




"Jacobe Hazzard" <spamsink@ATeudoramail.DOTcom> wrote in message news:<IjQAb.102618$Y4R1.692@news04.bloor.is.net.cable.rogers.com>...
Jeff Zimmerman wrote:
I am working on a robotics project, and i need a way to
control it cheaply. I have a couple of cordless phones
that aren't doing anything, so it seems simple enough to
use the DTMF to drive some relays and operate the motors.

If anyone could help me out, I would greatly appreciate
it.

What do you need help with, specifically?
 
jrz126@ieee.org (Jeff Zimmerman) wrote in message news:<c6842b8f.0312081135.2ac34793@posting.google.com>...
I'm not sure how to even begin, I was thinking I could use a DTMF
decoder (similar to one that will display the number dialed) on the
line input on the base. but I think the voltages would be a problem,
my robot is limited to 24 VDC.

Another idea was to try to figure out where the tone is generated on
the base and go from there. I think this would be alot harder.




"Jacobe Hazzard" <spamsink@ATeudoramail.DOTcom> wrote in message news:<IjQAb.102618$Y4R1.692@news04.bloor.is.net.cable.rogers.com>...
Jeff Zimmerman wrote:
I am working on a robotics project, and i need a way to
control it cheaply. I have a couple of cordless phones
that aren't doing anything, so it seems simple enough to
use the DTMF to drive some relays and operate the motors.

If anyone could help me out, I would greatly appreciate
it.

What do you need help with, specifically?

Hi,

Go to http://www.boondog.com and scroll down the tutorials list to the
DTMF decoder. I thinks that is pretty much what you are looking for.

Regards,

Anand Dhuru
 

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